A man who pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit computer fraud and identity
theft has been sentenced to one year's imprisonment by a Florida court.
Justin A Perras was one of five co-defendants who admitted hacking into
computers at information management and workflow provider
LexisNexis.
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The computers were accessed using Trojans and social engineering tricks in
order to make unauthorised entries into the company's
Accurint
database, which is used by law enforcement agencies among others.
Perras was sentenced to one year in prison, followed by three years
supervised release and 100 hours of community service.
The other defendants were sentenced in December 2006 for their roles in the
conspiracy, and between them must pay LexisNexis $105,750 in compensation.
All five culprits have been banned from using computers following the
discovery of their crimes.
"The US law enforcement agencies must be congratulated again for another big
computer hacking arrest, which will hopefully deter others from following in the
footsteps of Perras who is going nowhere fast for the next few years," said
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at
Sophos.
"The case demonstrates the value of swiftly reporting any network intrusions
to the appropriate authorities.
"However, the fact that Accurint was used by law enforcement agencies is
likely to have given the US secret service an extra spring in its step in
tracking down the perpetrators."
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